BlackRock said on Friday it has limited withdrawals from a flagship debt fund after a surge in redemption requests, as investor worries mount around the $2 trillion private credit industry. Shares of the worldโs largest asset manager fell 6. 7% on the New York Stock Exchange, amid a broader market selloff after worse-than-expected U.
S. jobs data and escalating U.
S. -Israeli war against Iran.
Sentiment has soured around private credit in recent months, and retail investors are increasingly asking for their money back from funds like BlackRockโs $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund (HLEND), which โ were โdesigned to be open to wealthy individuals. โIt should serve as a warning sign for the industry and the rulemakers about the downside of illiquid funds for retail investors,โ said Greggory Warren, senior stock analyst at Morningstar. Last yearโs bankruptcies of a U.
S. auto parts supplier and a subprime auto lender, along with the collapse of a UK mortgage lender last week, have raised questions about lending standards. Earlier this week, mounting โrequests โprompted rival Blackstone to lift the usual 5% redemption limit on a $82 billion โ fund to 7%, while the company and its employees invested $400 million to allow all requests to be met.
Blue Owl bought back 15. 4% of one of its funds in January.
HLEND received โwithdrawal requests worth $1. 2 billion in the first quarter, or roughly 9.
3% of its net asset value. Story continues below this ad It told investors it would pay out $620 million as part of the quarterly redemption, hitting the 5% threshold that is the standard point at which managers of these funds can restrict further withdrawals. Blue Owl replaced client redemptions at one fund with promised payouts.
โThe biggest risk for the alternative asset managers is that a marked increase in loan defaults on the part of their borrowers has an adverse effect on investment performance, which impacts future fundraising and monetizations,โ Warren said. STRUCTURAL MISMATCH HLEND, a business development company (BDC) acquired โ by BlackRock along with its manager, HPS โ Investment Partners, in a $12 billion push into private credit in 2024, said withdrawal requests breached the 5% limit for the first time since the fundโs inception.
Story continues below this ad BDCs raise money, โ predominantly from retail investors, and use it โto extend loans to mid-sized companies that usually cannot be sold quickly, which spells trouble if โlots of investors want to sell at once. Blackstone President Jon Gray said last โweek that institutional investors were continuing to allocate to private credit. HLEND said the 5% curb prevents โa structural mismatch between investor capital and the expected duration of the private credit loans in which HLEND invests.
โ โBy preventing redemptions โthrough gates, fund managers can avoid being โforced sellers of โassets, which would โnegatively impact investment returns for the remaining fund investors, given the opacity and illiquidity of the holdings in these funds,โ Morningstarโs Warren said. Subscriptions to the fund were $840 million in the first quarter, lower โthan the $1. 2 billion that investors originally sought to withdraw.
Story continues below this ad SOFTWARE EXPOSURE HLEND says its loans are โ primarily to mature private companies with stable cash flows, and structured to be paid back first if the borrower goes bankrupt. It pays dividends monthly.
According to company documents, 19% of HLENDโs portfolio is tied up in software, a sector that has faced โaggressive selling as investors fear โ disruption from AI-first startups. Investors are also rushing to safe havens as markets reel with heightened volatility this year, amid mounting concerns of an economic slowdown from a prolonged conflict in the Middle East, โAI-fueled disruptions and loan defaults.
HPS said in a statement that it has an opportunity to lean into the volatility.

